A multi-agent simulation is like having many little robots playing together to show how things work in real life.
Imagine you're at a playground with lots of kids. Each kid has their own idea of what they want to do, some want to swing, others want to slide, and maybe one wants to be the leader of a game. A multi-agent simulation is like watching all those kids make choices and interact with each other in different ways.
Like Little Robots Making Choices
In these simulations, each robot (or agent) acts like a kid, it has its own rules about what it wants to do, how it makes decisions, and how it affects the others around it. Sometimes they work together, sometimes they fight for the same toy, and sometimes one robot just wants to be by itself.
These little robots can show us how traffic flows in a city, how people move through a crowd at a mall, or even how animals behave in nature, all without needing real kids or real animals!
By watching these little robots act out their stories, we can learn about bigger things like crowds, businesses, and even the weather.
Examples
- A group of people choosing where to sit in a restaurant based on their preferences
- Students deciding which class to attend based on who else is there
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See also
- What are non-linearities?
- What are large-scale numerical simulations?
- What are emergent properties?
- What is Several things going wrong at once?
- What is Heterogeneity?